Litcius/Paper detail

The Impact of Interferon-γ (IFN-γ) and IFN-γ-Inducible Protein 10 (IP-10) Genes’ Polymorphism on Risk of Hepatitis C Virus–Related Liver Cirrhosis

Roba M. Talaat, Shimaa Elsharnoby, Mohamed S. Abdelkhalek, Soha Z. El-Shenawy, Samir El‐Masry

2021Immunological Investigations11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background: Today there is increasing evidence concerning the association between individual genetic polymorphisms within proinflammatory cytokines and chronic hepatitis C (CHC) severity. It has been demonstrated that polymorphisms in some genes may significantly predict HCV infected patients’ susceptibility to developing liver cirrhosis or their responsiveness to the treatment.Aim: We investigated the influence of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in Interferon (IFN-γ) and Interferon Gamma-Inducible Protein 10 (IP-10) genes on cirrhosis risk in HCV-infected patients and their association with response to various direct-acting antiviral drugs (DAAs).Methods: IFN-γ (+874T/A, +2109A/G) and IP-10 (−135G/A, −1447A/G) genotypes were determined in 175 CHC Egyptian HCV patients (69 liver cirrhotic and 106 non-cirrhotic patients) using either single-stranded polymorphism polymerase chain reaction (SSP-PCR) or Restriction fragment length-PCR (RFLP-PCR) methods.Results: IFN-γ + 874 TA, IP-10 − 135AA, and IP-10 − 1447AA and IP-10 − 1447GG genotypes are increased in patients developing liver cirrhosis compared to non-cirrhotic ones. Although, no statistical significance in their distribution was demonstrated, indicating the lack of association between these SNPs and liver cirrhosis susceptibility in HCV-infected patients. Haplotypes analysis between different loci on all selected genes showed a significant increase in AGGA and TAGA and a significant decrease in TGGA haplotypes in cirrhotic patients. Genotype frequencies at loci −135 and −1447 of IP-10 appeared to be in complete Linkage disequilibrium (LD) (D’ = 0.999, r2 = 0.689).Conclusion: Our data support the concept that IFN-γ and IP-10 gene polymorphisms are not predictors of disease progression among Egyptian patients with HCV infection.

Topics & Concepts

CirrhosisSingle-nucleotide polymorphismHaplotypeGenotypeHepatitis C virusLinkage disequilibriumBiologyLiver diseaseImmunologyRestriction fragment length polymorphismInterferonHepatitis CGeneVirologyVirusMedicineGeneticsInternal medicineBiochemistryHepatitis C virus researchCytokine Signaling Pathways and InteractionsChemokine receptors and signaling